Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has scheduled a cloture vote
for Monday on a $247 billion bill to avoid cuts in Medicare
payments to doctors, according to a Senate GOP source.
As I reported
earlier, when combined with the supposedly fiscally prudent
Senate Finance Committee bill, Reid's proposal would bring the
cost of health care legislation to above $1 trillion, and ensure
that it creates deficits -- in violation of President Obama's
pledge. By doing a smaller and separate $247 billion bill, it
will be easier to claim that the larger health care bill they
push is deficit neutral.
Reid is trying to rush this bill through, and today scheduled a
cloture vote to break any hopes of a filibuster for 5:30 p.m. on
Monday.
Earlier today, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said
Republicans supported pulling back the scheduled cuts to doctor
reimbursement rates, but that they would offer ammendments to pay
for it.
"I think virtually all of my members are in favor of fixing
this reimbursement problem, but we think there are ways to pay
for it," McConnell said. "And when it comes up in
the Senate, we're going to offer amendments that will give us an
opportunity to pay for an adjustment that most of us think ought
to be -- ought to be done. But this is so transparent. They're
taking this issue out of health care, suggesting that we spend a
quarter of a trillion dollars, not pay for it, so that they can
then argue, the very next week potentially, that this
trillion-dollar health care bill is paid for."